Jocko Podcast - The Debrief w/ Jocko and Dave Berke #2: Importance of Contingency Planning
Episode Date: September 1, 2020Jocko and Good Deal Dave Analyze some issues and look for solutions.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content...
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This is the Jocko debrief podcast, episode two with Dave Burke and me, Jocko Willink.
Dave, let's debrief.
What do you got?
Working with this company, and we beat them for a little while, but they have a,
facing a little bit of a challenge, they've got a competitor right now that for the last
several months has been prepping a release of a competitive product, same idea, same space
to them and they had been building up in anticipation of this competition releasing this product.
And their plan was they were going to go out kind of canvas the country with a lot of face-to-face
interaction with their potential clients and kind of explaining them the difference between
those two and try to show that their product is still the superior product.
There is no face-to-face conversations right now.
So I'm talking to the head of the sales department who had built this strategy on doing this
face to face and because they cannot implement that strategy, he feels like they are setting themselves
up for a retreat and that they are going to lose because this other company is position a little bit
better and that they are concerned about how that's going to play out. And they actually should be
concerned. Well, yeah, if you're if you've got plan A and it looks like plan A isn't going to work
and you don't know what plan B is, you're going to face some issues. That's why we contingency plan.
Yeah.
The contingency planning, first of all, contingency planning is something you should do all the time.
Plan A is always a good plan.
That's fine, but you should always have some backups or at least consider what a lot of people do.
And I understand this too.
We don't always think of these other really worst case scenarios.
When they were doing their initial planning a year and a half ago.
I mean, this is a long range release.
This doesn't just happen overnight.
Nobody was really thinking of this massive change, which is totally understandable.
So some of the problems that come with this totally different world, all the companies are facing it.
It's not like one company can go do face-to-face meetings and you can't.
You're all kind of stuck in the same boat.
The real issue here as we started to dissect it was, so we had this big wave come out in March, this COVID wave that shut all this travel down.
And the plan was, hey, it's May, June.
I see the light at the end of the tunnel.
We're starting to kind of ramp back up.
It looks like travel is going to open back up.
We're going to stick with Plan A.
and as this, I don't know if it's the right word to call it like a second wave or whatever we want to call it as it became clear that things were not opening up on the right pace.
That's kind of when the panic set in.
And the initial part of the conversation is, hey, what's the real problem?
Hey, the real problem is you did not have a plan B.
The real problem isn't what the competitor is doing.
Isn't how they position themselves or what they're delivering to the market.
The problem is is that you did not put your sales team, you did not lead your team to be in a position to respond.
to this crisis effectively.
Yeah, and there's a little, I'll pick on you a little bit about the way you said that.
So you said the problem was that they didn't have a plan B.
That's one statement, which is accurate.
But then you also said that the problem is that they didn't respond.
And that's an accurate statement.
I believe that the more accurate statement out of those two, you see the difference between
those two, right?
Yes.
Like, hey, I didn't have a plan.
be but guess what when I got hit with a contingency that I didn't expect it's okay because I'm gonna respond to it so for me in this particular case
I'm thinking this is more along the lines of lack of response
happening because there's a funny thing that we used to make fun of guys in the seal teams that would start to plan contingencies and they start to plan for every
contingency and we would say hey what you know what happens if a UFO touchdown and and three of your people are are scooped
up by the UFO, then what, then what are you going to do?
So to me, this is a, that's what COVID is.
I had no contingency in my mind where I thought, hey, you know, I can understand,
look, we get a terrorist attack and travel gets shut down for a week, two weeks.
Okay, you know, we, there's a contingency plan for that.
And it's a pretty straightforward one.
You barely even have to do it.
Guess what?
We're going to cancel some stuff and then we'll reschedule.
I mean, this is something that's so simple.
You don't really even have to think about it.
But when you start saying, okay, if you would have told me to list out the top 20 contingencies for for Eschlam Front or from any business, I would have not put viral travel shutdown in the top 20.
And maybe I'm ignorant, sure.
No, I think that is a reasonable thing to not include in your contingency list, which is a global pandemic shutdown of all travel.
I mean, I know I should have listened to Bill Gates because he did a TED talk about it.
And it was, you know, seriously, there's like people that, and there was, you know, it's interesting on the political spectrum, too, you saw people saying, well, you know, you should have been ready for this contingency. It's like, how many contingencies are you going to be ready for? Right. And so instead of the, well, in addition to being ready for likely contingency. That's a key word that we always used in the seal teams when we talk about contingencies. It was likely contingencies. You prepare for the top three.
for likely contingencies.
Once you get beyond that,
well, now what we have to do
is we have to be able to respond quickly.
We have to make decisions quickly.
And this is one of the main lessons
that I've been teaching through COVID
as iterative decision making is,
hey, I'm known for being very decisive.
Why am I known for being very decisive?
Because I make very quick decisions.
But the way that I cheat in doing that
is I make very quick, small decisions.
When COVID,
hit and we started we had the muster happening in what was it supposed to happen in may
hey COVID's here no travel cancel muster well am I going to immediately cancel muster well I don't
know how long COVID's going to last it might be gone by then what so instead it's not a massive
decision immediately hey Jamie call the hotel we're shutting down no hey Jamie who if you don't know
is our operations director at Eschon Front.
Hey, Jamie, why don't you talk to the hotel and just see what kind of things we could do
if we need to push this event back?
How much flexibility do they have?
So she starts going down the road.
That's a pretty decisive.
Hey, I made that decision in five seconds, right?
Oh, Jocco is super decisive.
Yeah, I'm super decisive because all I did was to ask Jamie to call someone and talk to him about
something.
It's decisive.
But here's the cool thing.
It was action.
It was action.
We're taking positive action.
So Jamie, who prior to that's going on the, you know, thinking herself, oh gosh, what's
going to happen to the muster?
You know, that's a big, that's a big thought.
What's going to happen to the muster?
What's going to happen?
Well, so she doesn't know what to do.
Well, guess what you're going to do?
You're going to call the hotel and see what the options are.
Okay.
Boom.
All of a sudden she's got a moat.
She knows what she's doing.
She's going to gather some information.
And when she gathers that information, guess what we're going to do?
We're going to reassess it.
We're going to make another small step.
So being able to respond to bad situations or completely unpredictable in situations or situations where the information isn't all that good, all those things, if you're able to do that well, are the marks of a good leader and a good team.
when you aren't able to respond, well, that's obviously the marks of a bad leader and a bad team.
So, yeah, I think it's important to recognize that you're not going to be able to plan for every contingency.
It's just not going to happen.
And what you need to do is train and keep your mind open so that when things that you don't expect happen,
you can adapt to the situation and you can respond appropriately.
Yeah, that's a really good point.
And one of the interesting things that played out as this several-month process went through is this, their initial, their pre-COVID plans, a good plan.
They're really well positioned.
They had a solid team.
They're in the game.
You'd work with them in the past.
This is kind of their second iteration with us.
They kind of embraced the reality back in March.
but they never really,
they never really let go of the,
what they wanted to do.
This face to face is the best way we communicate.
Nobody does it better than us.
I can sit down across from you.
I can convey this message.
And it was a little unwillingness to just accept what was happening.
And one of the things that,
it was, again,
very early on in the COVID scenario was you're on EF online.
You had,
you said something,
I think in the very first one,
and we repeated it over and over again,
except this is real.
You said, you told people, you got to accept this is real.
And so as March became April, then April kind of turned to June and, hey, maybe they looked for reasons why they could just go back to the original plan.
And the part that was the most challenging was from March to July, August, that alternative plan was no longer quite as crazy as it would have been if we were doing this back last year.
So this potential of not being able to do face-to-face was becoming much more real.
And what they started to look for is reasons why they didn't have to do that.
Hey, I heard travels opening up in the Northeast.
Hey, this airline is no.
And so they held on to that too long.
The outcome of that was, just like you said, the ability to maneuver.
What prevented them from being able to respond was the unwillingness to just accept this is real
and accept that is a much more likely alternative
than if you were to say, like I said,
seven months ago, you got some magic crystal ball.
Here come the Martians.
Of course, that's not a reasonable thing.
The way this kind of played out, though,
is when we had that first conversation,
was like, listen, the issue here is as a leader,
you didn't put your team in a position to respond.
What he came back with was,
we've got a two-day role-play scenario.
I'm bringing every salesperson on my sales team,
on a live two-day Zoom session,
can you support with us and role play
because we have to be ready for the virtual interaction?
And that idea actually came from a couple of subordinates,
a couple of his junior sales reps,
who had accepted the fact that this is not gonna play out
the way you think, boss, I think this is gonna be a problem for us.
We're not gonna get to do face to face.
And when he finally accepted that this was real,
it was awesome to see that team pivot
and him,
Say, hey, listen, you know what?
I'm miscalculated team.
I got this wrong.
What do we do now?
Because now we're weeks away from this.
And they were able to go right into this two-day session that we supported and jumped on the calls of them
and watched them go through back and forth and help them do the role play.
And the real issue for him was he finally accepted that this was real.
Yeah.
And wrapped up in all that is an expression that you hear all the time.
And it's that people see what they want to see.
And that is so wrapped up in there.
And if you think about what that expression is wrapped up in,
guess what?
That expression is wrapped up in ego.
I think things are going to go this way.
I want things to go this way.
And therefore, when I see, you know, the Northeast open up travel on trains,
planes are next, bro.
Plains are next.
We're good to be south.
Northeast is, they got hit first.
They're already out of it.
We're good to go.
Let's roll.
It's we don't have to worry about this stupid online stuff. We're gonna be back face to face
People see what they want to see and when I say people
I'm talking about you
I'm talking about me I see what I want to see and that's one of those
One of the things that you have to be watch out for when you're a positive minded person. Hey, this is gonna go good and this is where I actually
I'm you know mr. positive see the good right all the time
But there's things that I feel
deeply. One of them is the crunch of time. I really feel the crunch of time because I recognized
it a long time ago as the one factor that there is absolutely no mercy. It has no mercy. You let that
you let that hour go. You let those two months go by. They are not going to have mercy on you.
And if you think about that, if you constantly pay attention to time because people just lose
track of it. People just lose track of it. They think that they can crunch it. They think they
make it back they think you can turn it around you can't and for me time is always like a primary
driver of letting me see what reality is because if you're not dealing with reality if you're not
accepting what is going to happen or what could happen and by the way how much what do i give up if
if i think something is going to happen or i think something else is going to happen what do i sacrifice
by saying okay look like i got some contingency to plan for looks like i need to set up you know a security
element over here in case we get attacked from over there. That seems like a good move. What does it cost
me? Nothing. It doesn't cost me anything. So you can make maneuvers to prepare for things that are
coming. Whether you're right or wrong, it doesn't matter. You didn't sacrifice very much to make this
adjustment. So when you get shut down and you think it's going to be for a month and then you'll be
able to go back to face to face, cool. So what are you going to do for the next month? We're going to
hibernate or not to sit around, right? What do you gain from that? Nothing. What do you gain by saying,
hey look just in case just in case I'm wrong and just in case the reality is we're not going to be able to travel for another six months
Let's start coming up with a plan on how we're going to execute this thing
And by the way, let's start executing it. Let's give it a shot
And if you do that what do you sacrifice you don't sacrifice anything and you actually
Move yourself and your team forward
Which is what we're trying to do
Yeah and there's so many components inside there there's
obviously take an ownership of the problem.
There's cover and move where people are working together
and solving problems. There's a whole bunch
of individual elements that we teach.
But all of it together is the idea
that as a leader, you are
responsible for your team being
successful. We have to do whatever is required to do
that. And
the only thing worse than
the panic of recognizing you
wasted those two months or whatever that time
is, is when you look out
over the horizon, you see that your competition
didn't.
And that was a hard lesson for them.
Again, their ability to respond to that,
they had subordinately to step up and make things happen,
which was awesome to see.
But that adds to the, hey, not only did you waste your time,
they didn't.
Because where does that put you?
That puts you four months behind.
Right?
Because they moved two months and you waited.
Nowhere.
Rough.
All right.
Next one.
What do you got?
Company reached out to us.
This was kind of cool because when they first reached out to Eschelon Front looking for leaders development,
what they were looking for is they got a company that works and safety is a huge part of what they do.
They put people out on site and they deal with kind of high risk terrain and things like that.
So safety is a critical component of their culture.
As you might guess, companies that work in high risk environments, they're littered with young, motivated type A people that don't always think about their own personal.
safety. And when they reached out to echelon front, a lot of it was the experience that the
seals had. And they actually connected with me as well because in my experience with aviation,
they thought there'd be a really cool connection between the risk that the military takes
on the aviation side and in the ground side and drawing a parallel to how to improve
their safety culture. So they originally asked us to come and join them and we started working
with them. Their goal was to help us or have us help them build a better culture of safety.
to lower mishaps, lower injuries,
and help their team.
When I first started to explain to them,
I said, hey, let me offer how echelon front as a company,
when we work with companies a lot dealing with the same thing.
Let me talk to you about how we look at safety culture.
Safety problems inside an organization is a leadership problem.
We don't look at safety as some sort of standalone,
separate, isolated thing that you have to fix your safety culture.
If you have a problem with safety,
you have a leadership problem.
Yeah, and by the way, we look at every problem that you have as a leadership problem.
But you are right.
It is interesting that people try and carve safety out as if this isn't really, hey, look, you know, people got to be safe.
But that's the responsibility of the safety officer over there.
Totally.
We have a safety team.
We want to help bolster the safety team so they can go make people safe.
And what I did was I just made the connection between our view of safety.
And look, look, aviation, same in the world you came up with.
Safety is very important.
But what I told him, I said, hey, let me just explain how we see it and see if we can find some compatibility.
This is before we started working together.
I said, hey, we do not see safety as the mission.
Safety is not what we do.
Let me talk about why safety is important, though.
Our mission, my mission in aviation was to take an airplane, go over and drop bombs or do what I'm going to do with an aircraft.
I'm going to take a team and I'm going to go across the line of departure and engage an enemy.
There is inherent risk associated with that.
airplanes can be risky. And if I want to ensure that I have a perfect safety record, the way to
guarantee that I have no safety mishaps and no safety problems in an airplane is I don't fly. I will
never crash an airplane if I don't go fly an airplane. The problem with that is, is I will not
accomplish my mission. I will not be successful in the military. As a pilot, I won't be successful
in business if we say to ensure safety. So we just won't go to our job. We won't go out on site
and work in a high risk environment. The flip side, if I just ignore safety and go, hey, I'm not here to
be safe. I'm here to get the job done. I'm here to accomplish the mission. I'm going to take my
team and go do whatever is required. You're going to start hurt people. You're going to start
breaking things. You're going to start damaging things. And over time, you won't have the people
and the equipment to do your job. And guess what happens to the mission? The exact same thing.
You will not be successful. So there's actually a balance between having no concern for risk
and being so risk averse and being so safety focused that you don't actually do your job. Neither
one of those will help you accomplish it. And when we made the connection, they recognized what they
didn't need was us to train their safety team. What they needed was leadership development inside
their company. And by definition, the safety culture would improve at their company. Yeah, I think
this was on EF online the other day. It might have been with a client. Somebody asked about culture
and, you know, the establishment of culture and how important is culture. And I got a little
fired up talking about this because when you extrapolate culture out, culture is actually the
ultimate form of decentralized command, is the ultimate form of decentralized command.
If I understand the culture of my team, then I can actually make decisions based on our values.
If I know that as an American service member overseas, we want to, we, we uphold the highest values.
When I have to make a decision about what I'm going to do, I can make a decision.
I can make just about any decision based on the fact that I want to do the right thing.
That's what I'm trying to do.
So if you're in a company and you understand what the culture is, you understand that the culture is,
always take care of the customer.
You can make 99% of your decisions just based on the fact that, hey, look, the customer's
bringing back this piece of equipment that we gave them and they say it's broken.
Okay.
Yep.
Hey, Roger that.
No problem.
Here's your, here's a new piece of equipment.
Now, can it get to a point where somebody brings back a, you know, a million dollar
piece of equipment?
You say, oh yeah, no problem.
No questions asked here.
No, there's a limit.
But you can make 99% of your decisions just based on understanding the culture of the company.
thing with safety. If we understand where the level of safety and how important safety is,
if we understand that, then we can make 99.9% of our decisions correctly just based
on our understanding of safety culture. So culture is an absolutely powerful thing. And yes,
you are right that where culture comes from is leadership. And what's important when I say that
culture comes from leadership when I talk to companies about culture I say where does culture
come from people say the leadership I say who are the leaders everybody everybody
in an organization is responsible for the culture inside that organization it's not
just hey the the CEO sets the culture well the CEO has influence on the culture
but that CEO can have a culture in his mind but if the people if the team doesn't
understand except acknowledge encourage grow
and believe that culture that culture is worthless everyone that that culture has to be
unified throughout the organization how do you get the culture unified throughout
the organization well what we have to do is we have to make sure that everyone
understands why we have this culture we have to understand that hey listen you
want to know why we have the culture of the customer always being right the
customers comes first you want to know why we have that culture why why we have
that culture why well number
We want to provide a good service. That's great. We're good people. We want to provide a good service.
Also, when we provide good service, people go out and tell other people about the good service that we provide.
People review us on the internet. People refer us business.
We end up with a good quality rating when we get a good quality rating from people people come back. It grows our business.
The more our business grows the more people come in here the more people get treated well the more people spread that word that is how we grow
The opposite, if we don't care about our customers, guess what?
Bad word spreads even faster than good word and we'll end up with no business here at all.
Safety.
Why is safety important for our culture?
Well, because we don't want any going to hurt.
Yeah, absolutely.
We care about our people for sure.
Guess what else?
If we have accidents all the time, guess what happens to our insurance?
Do you know that there's companies, there's owners that will not hire us to build if we have
a bad safety record?
They don't want a safety group.
They want to a group with safety issues.
So if we have a bad safety record, Dave, if you break the safety rules and you get hurt, it's not just you that gets hurt.
Yeah, that's horrible for you.
It's horrible for your family.
It's horrible for your being able to pay your mortgage.
It's horrible for a bunch of reasons.
But on top, you're not just hurting yourself.
It hurts the company because now the company has to pay more insurance and now guess what happens to our price?
We got to raise our price.
And now, do we get more jobs or less jobs when we raise our price?
I'll tell you, we get less jobs.
When we get less jobs, do you still have a job?
No, you don't.
So the culture is not just something you can pull out of thin air and mandated on people.
There has to be an explanation behind culture, and the most important part of that explanation
has to be why we have this culture and how the culture itself reinforces the survivability
and the growth of our organization.
That culture to decentralized command connection, you actually also,
made that on an EF online session from a question from one of the troopers who joins us on a if on a phone on a phone after because every time something comes up you and I end up on the phone talking about some leadership thing and doing a debrief doing a debrief that's right and I remember calling you like hey that was that the way you communicated that to them and we actually made the connection to this client which was this idea that culture is what allowed that's what decentralized
command is built around.
And that was a really powerful thing for me,
because it was this idea that,
in simplest terms for decentralized command,
it's what let people make those decisions
without their boss being over there,
telling them what to do,
which simply cannot be done
because you can't be with all your people all the time.
But it got connected directly to what you said
was one of the problems they described was like,
well, we only have a two-person safety team.
We can't hire 20 safety people.
It's exactly right.
That's why every single person in the organization has to understand that despite whatever their title is or their job or their particular skill, they are responsible for safety.
And actually, they're responsible for everything.
But that connection of culture, which all too often, culture is just some sort of thing that's written on the wall.
This is what we believe.
But people don't truly understand what it means.
When I can now connect that to a principle that we teach, decentralized command is a principle we teach.
and I'm actually able to explain it in a way that they go,
oh, I know what you're talking about.
I read that the book.
You talked about that when you gave your combat leadership brief to us.
That was a really powerful thing that worked directly with them
because you know what?
Most companies can't have an entire safety team just running around
making sure everybody's safe.
They need to rely on their people to believe in that.
It lets their people make decisions that they know
is in the best interest of the organization winning.
And that was just a huge point that made a huge impact of this team.
It's amazing how everything's connected, isn't it?
Indeed.
All right.
What do we got?
One more?
Yeah.
What do you got?
We got.
So you like the fact that you prep these?
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is awesome.
I'm like, well, let's do it.
But I can't prep any more podcast, bro.
You need to at least come up with a subject matter.
I'll debrief it all day long.
But these are on you, man.
Dude, the coolest part about it is when you ask me, you're like, hey, I got this idea.
I think we should do this.
you come up with some stuff and I'm like jocco I have an unlimited supply I mean every single day
I am talking with clients that we're working with about these problems and how we're applying
the prince was to teach to help them come up with a solution and there's an unlimited supply of this
and again these problems might be specific to these companies but they are relevant and apply
everywhere when's the last time you went on the road face to face with a company the first week of
March was the last time I was on an airplane.
So it's been interesting and we've been very lucky because we never would have been able
to convince people that we can do what we do over the internet.
We never would have been able to convince people if everyone didn't get forced to make
Zoom calls with their family and make Zoom calls.
You know, I always tell people I had Easter dinner with my parents on Zoom.
And that's when I realized, okay, this is, we're at a different place now.
And, you know, trying to explain to a client, there's another good move was, was, and we all just, just kind of did this instinctively.
When we had to cancel something, when a client canceled with us and we would connect with them to discuss where we go from here.
Yeah, sure.
Let's do a Zoom meeting and let's talk about what we can do to help you out.
Boom, all of a sudden, we're on a Zoom meeting with them and we're having a real-time discussion and they can see that, look, do you lose something on Zoom?
sure you lose there's there's some there there's some element that gets lost it is very small
yeah it is very small it's a very small element you know maybe you lose some of the body
language maybe you lose some level of of of the presence but the reality is when I'm talking to
200 people in a room I can't see I can't see the facial expressions of those people in the back
and when I'm talking to 200 people on a zoom call I see everybody I see I see with it I see someone
that's got that puzzled look on their face,
or you've heard me do this on EF Online,
where I get done answering a question,
and they go, oh, they go, okay.
And I go, you didn't like that answer.
We're not there yet.
I don't understand.
In fact, I did that today.
I don't know if you noticed that today.
I go, I gave a couple answers,
and I go, you know, those aren't the answers we're looking for.
Those were my initial probes to try and figure out what's going on here,
but those aren't the answers that we're looking for.
Explain to me what's actually happening.
And that would not have happened
if I couldn't have seen that guy's face and been able in a Zoom call to be like, oh, okay, we can we can drill down a little bit right now.
Look, I'm on stage. There's 200 people sitting there. There's 400 people. There's 1,000 people sitting in the audience. We're not drilling down into the specifics of this guy's situation. On a Zoom call, I'm right here. Wait, let me, let me explain why. I'm in an auditorium with a thousand people and this guy asks a question. I'm going to give an answer. There's a thousand.
people, they're waiting, I can't see this guy's face barely.
I don't, we don't have the time and we don't have the, we don't have the, for lack of a
better word, we don't have the intimacy for me to look at this guy and say, explain to me what's
happening.
Yeah.
But when you're on a Zoom call, I'm six inches away from your face and you're six inches away
from my face because we're staring at a camera that's six inches away.
So the, the loss of, oh, maybe some presence, the loss of some body language,
Just in the fact that we can go a little bit deeper, it makes, there's some aspects of a Zoom meeting that absolutely is better than a live meeting.
Absolutely.
Especially, you know, when I go on to talk to, you know, someone's having a conference and it's a thousand people.
Look, you put, you put 2,000 people into an auditorium.
The people in the back, you know what they're looking at when I'm speaking?
They're looking at the video camera.
at the video camera that's projecting my big freaking head.
And by the way, in the back, they can't really even see that that clear.
So what are they looking at when they're on Zoom?
They're looking at me.
And guess what I'm doing?
I can see them.
And when they ask a question, there they are.
So there's some absolute advantages to it.
And we get these things on EF Online, and that allows us to dig down and figure out what's
going on.
But it's amazing that you list off the fact that you have all these, you know, I say,
hey, do you have any issues we can talk about?
You're like, I got issues we can talk about all day.
And what's amazing to me is all these are.
issues that are unfolding right now in Eschalon Front 2.0, which is Eschelon Front virtual training
through the interwebs. It's awesome. Yeah. Totally agree. I remember thinking at first, too, because,
hey, I like speaking. I like to talk. And one of the coolest parts about this job is it was
very much wheelhouse for me. I like to be on the stage. I like to talk. I get a little animated.
You can get right up with somebody. You can sit down. And there's a
a lot of things about the speaking in public thing that I really liked, and I was concerned a little
bit, like, hey, how am I, Dave Burke, going to be able to replicate that through Zoom?
I've actually even found, you said it well, because there are things that you can actually
do through Zoom that you can't do in person.
Anybody that's resistant to the idea that we can't forge good relationships or learn,
that's not true.
Because, yes, do you lose something face-face?
Sure.
But you can more than make up for it in other ways.
And it is not an excuse or a reason why you can't make things happen, which has been awesome for me who likes to be face-to-face talking to people.
Cheak, so speaking of all these issues we see right now, virtually, what's the third one?
All right.
So we have a site manager.
So inside a district that had five sites.
So a district had five different operations, each one was run by a site manager.
This site manager that I was working with that this larger company got promoted to district manager.
The very first task, the very first assignment for this newly promoted district manager who used to be a site manager was one of the other sites in their district was underperforming and they were now tasked with making sure that they get up on the step.
So what happened was is this person who was a site manager went from having a peer.
who was underperforming, one of the sites was underperforming,
actually making this site manager look pretty good
because she was outperforming her peers,
now had a subordinate who was underperforming,
which made her look bad
because she had a team that she was responsible for.
And the core of the question was,
how am I going to take ownership of this other site
that I was working parallel to,
sort of independently inside the district?
Now I'm responsible for this person.
performance, what am I going to do and say to allow me to now in this new role as her,
as his boss, her as his boss, getting them from being underperforming to getting up on the step
when before we were just peers working totally independently and the previous district manager
didn't get that person where they needed to be. And again, the answer to that question
wasn't really that hard when we started to dissect what her role was as a site manager,
her previous role.
And was she having issues with just the idea?
Like, oh, now I'm responsible for this when before.
What was the thing that she was trying to overcome?
Yeah.
What she wanted to do when she was going to set up her very first conversation with her now
subordinate site lead was sound authentic.
And how do I say that I can take ownership of this as your district manager without
kind of coming across as like, I'm just using the words of extreme ownership?
because she was struggling with how to say it.
So if I'm your boss and how I can take ownership of the problem
that your site is underperforming.
And she couldn't,
she wanted to talk through how can she sound authentic
in explaining that this is her problem to solve.
And this is something she's responsible for
she has ownership of.
So where'd you take her?
Well, the first thing was,
I highly recommend to everyone
when you were going to take ownership of a problem
is you should be authentic.
You actually have to believe
that is your responsibility. Do not walk in, apply the words that we teach at Eschlonfront
and think those words are going to solve your problem for you. So when she was questioning her
authenticity, do you think that she was actually thinking, well, now I'm supposed to be in charge,
but I really don't. Yeah, I don't really know how to make the connection because I don't really
understand how I could be responsible because before he ran his site, I ran my site. And just because
I'm his boss now, how do I go back in time and say that this history of underperforming
that I'm now responsible as a district manager is something I need to take ownership of?
Do you think the disconnect was her thinking, look, I was over there.
I did my job.
You don't need to get babysat.
Why am I supposed to help this person out?
That's exactly what it was.
So, okay, so that's what I was missing.
I couldn't quite figure out what the issue was.
Because I was just thinking, yeah, cool, no bad teams, only bad leaders.
We got someone that's underperforming.
How do we get in there and support them?
How can we help them?
And let's make this happen.
but she was thinking,
not really my responsibility.
Yeah, how am I responsible for him?
As a matter of fact,
I out maneuvered this person.
I got elevated and promoted
as a result of that performance.
And again, it's exactly what you just described,
which was what we did is we just spent a little time
kind of dissecting what her role was
when she was a site manager.
And why understanding what her role was as a site manager
will help her as a district manager
with five sites kind of all answering to her.
And the piece that she was missing, which is understandable,
is her job wasn't just for her site to do well.
That's not what the site manager does.
But in a very simplistic way,
the site manager is responsible for their site.
She's supposed to make sure her site performs and delivers
and meets the metrics and delivers on time.
And she did it very well.
That's actually not what your site manager's supposed to do.
Or should I say,
that's not the only thing your site manager is supposed to do.
And so the real question was, how do you want your five site leads to interact with each other?
How do you want them to work together?
Do you want them to be competing with each other, undercutting each other, benefiting from somebody else's underperformance?
Or do you actually want those five site leads, especially the ones that are outperforming the others,
to find ways to help those other sites?
So the entire district does better.
And that whole explanation just gave from the safety is actually the same thing, too, is that if I as a site lead help the other site leads perform well, who benefits?
And so the real, the hurdle was, hey, your role as a site lead wasn't just to have an awesome site that did really well.
It was more than that.
And now as a district manager, when you talk about your sites, four of them used to be your peers.
They hired from the outside to replace her in her particular job.
But the other four were people that were literally peers for the last two and a half years is what is it that you really want from them?
Operating in silos, autonomous from each other and benefiting from.
their failures or do you actually want to build a relationship where you share and challenge each other
and force each other to get better and share best practices and help them out and elevate everybody's
game? And we talked about that for a while and that made it a lot easier when we roll played the
actual conversation of her initial discussion as hey, I'm here as your new district manager.
We roleplay that a few times to have that discussion. What approach did she take? Well, give me like a little
bit of her opening salvo at the troops. The opening salvo at the five, the five,
new sorry the five site managers four of them which she's known for years that are her peers
was the first part of the conversation was hey listen I am so stoked for the opportunity
to be a district manager and work and engage with with all of you I got to be really
honest and I'm paraphrasing this is her saying I got to be really honest my view of what
I thought a site manager was supposed to do wasn't exactly right and what I have
come to realize as I thought about my role as a district manager
is that how I function as a site manager
wasn't how I really think we should operate.
And that's where the ownership piece came in
and what made it very easy for her to go,
oh, it's not even hard for me to take ownership of this
because all I have to do is explain the things
that I didn't do as a site manager
and what I realized I should have been doing
the whole time.
And then when on from there, you're smiling
because I can tell that that actually resonates
as the idea of, hey, if you understand
what you could have done for it.
The ownership piece comes naturally when you recognize what you should have done differently.
Yeah.
The note that I wrote down was, you know, when I was like, oh, what did she say?
Because I'm thinking like, this is what I would have said.
You know, I just did the way that I paraphrased it myself was that, you know, I'm opening up with, I was wrong.
Right.
I was wrong.
And that's just a perfect way to open up and say, look, you all saw me as a competitive person.
I was hiding information.
I was trying to kick your ass.
And that's actually not the right way to do this.
Do we want to be competitive with each other?
Sure, we want to do in a fun, positive way.
And right now, what we want to do, and here's where I would go right into it,
what we want to do is not be competitive with each other sites.
We as a team want to destroy the other districts.
So, yeah, I mean, we'd go there quick.
And of course, I'd say that and have a good time with that.
And so, look, even though I want to destroy them, guess what?
I want our company to win.
And so we're going to kick their ass, but we're also going to show them how we do it.
So we elevate everyone and that's going to elevate us and we're going to move forward.
So, yeah, that's.
I mean, and that's it.
And that's almost verbatim how to play it out was this district is going to dominate,
but I'm actually going to apply the lessons that I learned that I should have been doing back as a site lead
and apply that all the way across the organization.
And actually, one of the things she came to understand was if she does that,
if she dominates as a district commander, but also gets all the other districts in the game too,
she also is going to continue on the path
and she's going to grow in responsibility
and she's going to dominate,
which is what she wants to do as well.
So there's that connection.
Which is another thing,
leadership strategy and tactics.
If you're doing well
and you're doing the right things
for the right reasons,
your team is going to do well
and when your team does well
and they win, guess what?
You win.
All right.
42 minutes.
A little long,
but still kept it under the 45 minute.
That's a good place to stop.
If you want to dig deeper into all aspects of leadership in any arena, you can join Dave and me and the rest of the Eschelon Front team.
You can do it all the time.
You can talk to us all the time.
You can talk to us live.
EFonline.com.
It's where we solve problems with leadership.
And if you want leadership guidance inside your organization, come check out our leadership consultancy at Escalonfront.com.
As we talked about, we are doing this stuff.
through the interwebs, you can come and get it.
We will be there six inches from your face.
I've also written a bunch of books on the subject of leadership, extreme ownership,
the dichotomy of leadership, leadership strategy and tactics,
also have some other podcasts, Jocko podcast, Jocko unravelling, grounded,
and the Warrior Kid podcast.
And if you want to support any of these podcasts, including this one,
you can get some gear from jocco store.com or origin,
origin, main.com.
Thank you for listening to the debrief.
Now go lead.
This is Dave and Jocko.
Out.
